Parents concerned about what young children might be viewing on the web can choose from a handful of safe web browsers that limit and monitor the sites that children can click on and also limit browser time. About.com's Family Internet site provides some information about those browsers.
As people stay more connected with smartphones, tablets and other portable devices, browser apps grow more important. We found decent coverage of mobile browsers at Geek.com.
Web designers often need copies of old browsers to be sure their sites are compatible and display correctly. Most current developers maintain an archive of previous versions. In addition, a browser archive is available at Evolt.org.
Slate.com's tech guru, Farhad Manjoo, writes about Chrome's seamless background updates in his column "I Hereby Agree to Every Future iTunes Update."
You can keep up with browser trends on these sites:
Wikipedia has more information about Web 2.0 sites and applications.
|
Sponsored Links are keyword-targeted advertisements provided through the Google AdWords™ program. These listings are administered, sorted and maintained by Google. For information about these Google ads, go to adwords.google.com. Google may place or recognize a unique "cookie" on your Web browser. Information from this cookie may be used by Google to help provide advertisers with more targeted advertising opportunities. For more information about Google's privacy policy, including how to opt out, go to www.google.com/ads/preferences. By clicking on Sponsored Links you will leave ConsumerSearch.com. The web site you will go to is not endorsed by ConsumerSearch. |